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Orange-5 Programmer

Is a professional general purpose programming device for memory and microcontrollers. Unique feature of the current series programmers is built-in macrolanguage for writing down protocols, which gives fast and easy capability to add new types of ICs, precisely meeting manufacturers' requirements to read/write algorithms.

Hardware Features :

  • Universal easy to plug panel ZIF16 for EEPROMs
  • Control of contacts in the sockets
  • Two expansions sockets (MT & SE)
  • Protection against overcurrent
  • Overload voltage protection
  • Three 3 adjustable voltage and current control: Voltage of power supply ( 2.0...5.0V ), programming voltage (2.0...21.0V), additional static 10V for microcontrollers.
  • High-speed bidirectional pin drivers with adjustable voltage (2.0...5.0V)
  • Wave cycle generator with frequency ( up to 24 Mhz) and out voltage(2.0...5.0V) adjustment
  • Capability of functional emulation of class CDC USB devices
  • Built-in 32-bit virtual machine
  • Supported interface: I2C, SPI, MicroWire, JTAG, UART, BDM, ISO7816, K-LINE (via adapter), CAN (via adapter)

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Orange-5 Features

Mara watched the debate grow: was the app a public good or a magnifying glass that could slice privacy? She couldn't decide, and the platform refused to be defined by her indecision. It kept evolving.

Mara considered changing it, but she left it as it was. Some embarrassment could, she decided, be better for sleeping through.

Mara closed her laptop and walked to the kitchen. She set the kettle on and listened while water filled the room with the kind of small, domestic music that stitched days together. She thought of all the things she had given the app and all the things she'd withheld. She thought of Jonah's whistle, of the woman in Kyoto and her plant names, of the teenager cataloguing burned-out streetlights. She thought of time-locks and the child in 2042 who might, someday, click a link and find a laugh.

As fsiblog.com matured, it attracted attention from foundations and museums and also, inevitably, investors. The feather icon on Mara's screen acquired a small gold ribbon when the site announced partnerships with cultural institutions to preserve endangered languages' oral histories. There were benefits: more readers, more tokens, greater reach for fragile memories. There were also changes in tone. An institutional archive required metadata and standardized tags. Memories were sometimes rephrased to fit categories. The app's interface added fields: Source verification? Oral consent form? Age of memory?

Mara felt a tug between the app's original intimacy — a dim-lit room where people slipped each other folded notes — and its new publicness, where memories were curated into exhibits and timelines. She kept writing, kept granting, but she also began to withhold. Some memories, she decided, belonged to the small dark drawer of her life: the place a mother kept letters from a lover. The fsiblog.com community respected that. It also fostered a kind of moral imagination: people asked whether a memory's release could heal someone, whether it might reopen a wound, whether it could become a weapon.

They never shared personal details beyond the slivers necessary to stitch compassion into memory. The app was careful; it never demanded names. Over months, Mara found herself curating her past with the delicacy of a conservator. Sometimes Jonah wrote that a detail felt like his, and sometimes he said it did not, and both responses were fine.

Mara stared. It felt like a direct conversation. She understood suddenly that the app didn't only send memories forward; sometimes it threaded them back, creating loops of gratitude and recognition between strangers and the ones who had given away pieces of themselves.

Her phone vibrated on the table. A single token had arrived: a photograph of a tiny diner sign, glowing at night. The caption simply said, in the app's own plain font: For your father.

She tried to post one of her own to see how it behaved in the wild. She wrote about a summer she had spent working at a used-bookshop, inhaling the mildew of dust and the sweet geometric smell of ink. When she hit Publish, a small counter flickered: Views 0. Then a ping. Views 1. Somewhere, a reader had arrived.

Permissions? She hadn't set anything like that. The window asked if she granted the memory public release. Before she could decide, a new line appeared in the entry: A child in 2042 will need this. Grant or deny?

Time-locked meant that a memory would sleep for a set number of years before waking. A young woman scheduled a memory of a child's apology to arrive twenty years later, intuition perhaps hoping a guilt could look different with distance. A grandfather time-locked a letter that likely would outlast him.

The message came back in bursts. The person — a young man who called himself Jonah — sent a list of questions and, later, a photograph of a kitchen that could have been a hundred kitchens and none. He told her he had been adopted, that his mother had told him stories about a father he had never met but that stories and memory were not the same. He wanted to feel as if that man had ever existed outside of myths.

Then, on an otherwise ordinary Thursday, she received a message she couldn't ignore: Account flagged — unauthorized duplication detected.

They had scraped details, she supposed — a cheap, hungry imitation — but the confession that followed had the tone of someone trying to feel at a distance they could not reach. Mara had a choice. She could report the duplication and let the moderators strip the copied entry away, protecting the integrity of her memory. Or she could reply.

Mara found herself spending hours writing tiny, deliberate scenes and letting them loose. She learned the app's rules: memories once granted could not be edited; they could be retracted only by the original giver and only within forty-eight hours. Each memory carried a small metadata tag — hue, weight, scent — which was not literal but seemed to help the app place it. She grew particular about which memories she gave away. Some she archived offline, saved in folders named Aftershock and Quiet, just as she saved her father's sweater even after its elbow had worn through.

Utilities

Orange-5

O5Tool

Set of additional tools for Orange 5 programmer.Including generator of rectangular pulses, probe, logic analyzer, oscilloscope, emulator for CDC devices.

Features

  • Logic Analyzer: 8 channels, 32 KB of memory, the maximum frequency of recording - 2.5 MHz
  • Protocol analyzer: I2C, MicroWire, SPI, RS232 ...
  • Generator: Maximum rate - 16 MHz.
  • Logic probe - 12 channels.
  • Oscilloscope - the sampling frequency of 300 kHz, input voltage of 0-5 volts.

Orange-5

CnCterm

Terminal program for work with COM ports.

Features

  • Supports any COM ports, incuding virtual ones from 1 to 20
  • Works with text (ASCII) and HEX mode
  • Creating a list of commands that allows editing and fast sending
  • Fine-tuning the exchange rate
  • Saving files including command and port settings.
  • Saving incoming data in binary files
  • File transfer via serial port.
  • Delay settings for bytes and blocks
  • "Echo" mode
  • Delay settings between incoming data
  • Managment of DTR, RTS chains, visualising DSR, CTS, CD, RI
  • Program doesn't need to be installed
  • Supports Orange5 programmer in emulation mode.